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Ah, some very good examples of whimsy. I’m not sure I’m on board with the bowling ball. But I will admit to making my own forest of Ents with faces on trees. And I just posted on Examiner about some cool flamingo stuff, so that’s all good.

I had a flamingo like yours many years ago, but painters dropped a ladder on it. I loved it in all its tackiness. Your blue bottle plant is spectacular & just seeing the bowling ball reminded me of your post about it. You’ve inspired me to try to do more found objects (I have only reused glass chandelier shades), but then I have to consider your advice not to overdo it. There’s a thin line between whimsy & cheesy.

A truly excellent collection of whimsy, Craig. A pink flamingo in your garden? I’m truly shocked – and delighted. And how fun to see that you have wonderfully whimsical friends as well. I apologize for taking so long to visit, but I greatly appreciate you participating in the Design Workshop again this month!

Lisa at Greenbow @
3:43 pm

I like your whimsy. It doesn’t appear that you have too much. I really like the bowling ball on the rebar. Does it swing in the wind? That would be a hoot. Your friend has even more things than I do. That says a lot to me.

Craig @
4:31 pm

Nan: I wouldn’t be without a pink flamingo of some kind. This one blends in (as much as any pink flamingo can) this time of the year. When it really does it’s magic is in February. When I go out to shovel the driveway and the wings are spinning like an exhaust fan, it makes all that drifting snow a little easier to deal with.

Lisa: I could probably come up with a way to make bowling balls move in the wind. But this one is pretty firmly rooted. I’ll reposition it from time to time. But if the wind were strong enough to move it I fear I would have other problems that would distract from that fascination.

Your whimsy post was a lot of fun, Craig – I had to leave a pair of heirloom concrete flamingos with my sister when we moved to TX – they’d already been repaired and that trip might have finished them off. Wish I still had them. When Felder Rushing came to Austin last year he brought his Featherstone flamingo along – you really do need one!

If you want to make your bottle tree sound more classy, Felder gives this genus the botanical name Silica Transparencii ‘Gaudi’ in his Tough Plants book.

Craig @
2:55 pm

Annie: I try to listen to Felder’s podcast every week, even though the specific advice has little application here in the cold north. His way of answering folks questions should be a model for all garden educators. (Google Gestalt Gardener.)

He was an early inspiration to me to do whatever I damn please. Guess that’s kind of obvious.

Syndicate

In memory of Fred

1998 - 2012.

Full disclosure

In my day job, I work as a communications specialist in the Department of Horticulture at Cornell University. I take on freelance jobs from time to time. More gardeners than I can remember have given me plants and freely shared their wisdom. I try to do the same.